2013 -- S 0902 | |
======= | |
LC02486 | |
======= | |
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
| |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
| |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2013 | |
| |
____________ | |
| |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES - PUBLIC ASSISTANCE | |
|
      |
|
      |
     Introduced By: Senators DiPalma, Ottiano, Pichardo, and Goldin | |
     Date Introduced: May 02, 2013 | |
     Referred To: Senate Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1-1 |
     SECTION 1. Section 40-6-27 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-6 entitled "Public |
1-2 |
Assistance Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
1-3 |
     40-6-27. Supplemental security income. -- (a) (1) The director of the department is |
1-4 |
hereby authorized to enter into agreements on behalf of the state with the secretary of the |
1-5 |
Department of Health and Human Services or other appropriate federal officials, under the |
1-6 |
supplementary and security income (SSI) program established by title XVI of the Social Security |
1-7 |
Act, 42 U.S.C. section 1381 et seq., concerning the administration and determination of eligibility |
1-8 |
for SSI benefits for residents of this state, except as otherwise provided in this section. The state's |
1-9 |
monthly share of supplementary assistance to the supplementary security income program shall |
1-10 |
be as follows: |
1-11 |
     (i) Individual living alone: $39.92 |
1-12 |
     (ii) Individual living with others: $51.92 |
1-13 |
     (iii) Couple living alone: $79.38 |
1-14 |
     (iv) Couple living with others: $97.30 |
1-15 |
     (v) Individual living in state licensed assisted living residence: |
1-16 |
     (vi) Individual living in state licensed supportive residential |
1-17 |
     care settings that, depending on the population served, meet |
1-18 |
     the standards set by the department of human services in |
1-19 |
     conjunction with the department(s) of children, youth and |
2-20 |
     families, elderly affairs and/or behavioral healthcare, |
2-21 |
     developmental disabilities and hospitals: $300.00. |
2-22 |
     Provided, however, that |
2-23 |
|
2-24 |
|
2-25 |
|
2-26 |
|
2-27 |
|
2-28 |
|
2-29 |
|
2-30 |
|
2-31 |
1, 2014, and each January 1 thereafter, the department of human services shall increase the |
2-32 |
payment for individuals living in state licensed assisted living, subject to appropriation, by a |
2-33 |
percentage amount equal to the percentage rise in the United States consumer price index (CPI) |
2-34 |
for January 1 of that year; provided further, that the department of human services is authorized |
2-35 |
and directed to provide for payments to recipients in accordance with the above directives. |
2-36 |
     (2) As of July 1, 2010, state supplement payments shall not be federally administered and |
2-37 |
shall be paid directly by the department of human services to the recipient. |
2-38 |
     (3) Individuals living in institutions shall receive a twenty dollar ($20.00) per month |
2-39 |
personal needs allowance from the state which shall be in addition to the personal needs |
2-40 |
allowance allowed by the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. section 301 et seq. |
2-41 |
     (4) Individuals living in state licensed supportive residential care settings and assisted |
2-42 |
living residences who are receiving SSI shall be allowed to retain a minimum personal needs |
2-43 |
allowance of fifty-five dollars ($55.00) per month from their SSI monthly benefit prior to |
2-44 |
payment of any monthly fees. |
2-45 |
     (5) To ensure that supportive residential care or an assisted living residence is a safe and |
2-46 |
appropriate service setting, the department is authorized and directed to make a determination of |
2-47 |
the medical need and whether a setting provides the appropriate services for those persons who: |
2-48 |
     (i) Have applied for or are receiving SSI, and who apply for admission to supportive |
2-49 |
residential care setting and assisted living residences on or after October 1, 1998; or |
2-50 |
     (ii) Who are residing in supportive residential care settings and assisted living residences, |
2-51 |
and who apply for or begin to receive SSI on or after October 1, 1998. |
2-52 |
     (6) The process for determining medical need required by subsection (4) of this section |
2-53 |
shall be developed by the office of health and human services in collaboration with the |
2-54 |
departments of that office and shall be implemented in a manner that furthers the goals of |
3-1 |
establishing a statewide coordinated long-term care entry system as required pursuant to the |
3-2 |
Global Consumer Choice Compact Waiver. |
3-3 |
     (7) To assure access to high quality coordinated services, the department is further |
3-4 |
authorized and directed to establish rules specifying the payment certification standards that must |
3-5 |
be met by those state licensed supportive residential care settings and assisted living residences |
3-6 |
admitting or serving any persons eligible for state-funded supplementary assistance under this |
3-7 |
section. Such payment certification standards shall define: |
3-8 |
     (i) The scope and frequency of resident assessments, the development and |
3-9 |
implementation of individualized service plans, staffing levels and qualifications, resident |
3-10 |
monitoring, service coordination, safety risk management and disclosure, and any other related |
3-11 |
areas; |
3-12 |
     (ii) The procedures for determining whether the payment certifications standards have |
3-13 |
been met; and |
3-14 |
     (iii) The criteria and process for granting a one time, short-term good cause exemption |
3-15 |
from the payment certification standards to a licensed supportive residential care setting or |
3-16 |
assisted living residence that provides documented evidence indicating that meeting or failing to |
3-17 |
meet said standards poses an undue hardship on any person eligible under this section who is a |
3-18 |
prospective or current resident. |
3-19 |
     (8) The payment certification standards required by this section shall be developed in |
3-20 |
collaboration by the departments, under the direction of the executive office of health and human |
3-21 |
services, so as to ensure that they comply with applicable licensure regulations either in effect or |
3-22 |
in development. |
3-23 |
     (b) The department is authorized and directed to provide additional assistance to |
3-24 |
individuals eligible for SSI benefits for: |
3-25 |
     (1) Moving costs or other expenses as a result of an emergency of a catastrophic nature |
3-26 |
which is defined as a fire or natural disaster; and |
3-27 |
     (2) Lost or stolen SSI benefit checks or proceeds of them; and |
3-28 |
     (3) Assistance payments to SSI eligible individuals in need because of the application of |
3-29 |
federal SSI regulations regarding estranged spouses; and the department shall provide such |
3-30 |
assistance in a form and amount, which the department shall by regulation determine. |
3-31 |
     SECTION 2. Section 40-8.9-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.9 entitled "Medical |
3-32 |
Assistance - Long-Term Care Service and Finance Reform" is hereby amended to read as |
3-33 |
follows: |
4-34 |
     40-8.9-9. Long-term care re-balancing system reform goal. -- (a) Notwithstanding any |
4-35 |
other provision of state law, the department of human services is authorized and directed to apply |
4-36 |
for and obtain any necessary waiver(s), waiver amendment(s) and/or state plan amendments from |
4-37 |
the secretary of the United States department of health and human services, and to promulgate |
4-38 |
rules necessary to adopt an affirmative plan of program design and implementation that addresses |
4-39 |
the goal of allocating a minimum of fifty percent (50%) of Medicaid long-term care funding for |
4-40 |
persons aged sixty-five (65) and over and adults with disabilities, in addition to services for |
4-41 |
persons with developmental disabilities and mental disabilities, to home and community-based |
4-42 |
care on or before December 31, 2013; provided, further, the executive office of health and human |
4-43 |
services shall report annually as part of its budget submission, the percentage distribution |
4-44 |
between institutional care and home and community-based care by population and shall report |
4-45 |
current and projected waiting lists for long-term care and home and community-based care |
4-46 |
services. The department is further authorized and directed to prioritize investments in home and |
4-47 |
community-based care and to maintain the integrity and financial viability of all current long- |
4-48 |
term care services while pursuing this goal. |
4-49 |
      (b) The reformed long-term care system re-balancing goal is person-centered and |
4-50 |
encourages individual self-determination, family involvement, interagency collaboration, and |
4-51 |
individual choice through the provision of highly specialized and individually tailored home- |
4-52 |
based services. Additionally, individuals with severe behavioral, physical, or developmental |
4-53 |
disabilities must have the opportunity to live safe and healthful lives through access to a wide |
4-54 |
range of supportive services in an array of community-based settings, regardless of the |
4-55 |
complexity of their medical condition, the severity of their disability, or the challenges of their |
4-56 |
behavior. Delivery of services and supports in less costly and less restrictive community settings, |
4-57 |
will enable children, adolescents and adults to be able to curtail, delay or avoid lengthy stays in |
4-58 |
long-term care institutions, such as behavioral health residential treatment facilities, long-term |
4-59 |
care hospitals, intermediate care facilities and/or skilled nursing facilities. |
4-60 |
      (c) Pursuant to federal authority procured under section 42-7.2-16 of the general laws, |
4-61 |
the department of human services is directed and authorized to adopt a tiered set of criteria to be |
4-62 |
used to determine eligibility for services. Such criteria shall be developed in collaboration with |
4-63 |
the state's health and human services departments and, to the extent feasible, any consumer |
4-64 |
group, advisory board, or other entity designated for such purposes, and shall encompass |
4-65 |
eligibility determinations for long-term care services in nursing facilities, hospitals, and |
4-66 |
intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded as well as home and community-based |
4-67 |
alternatives, and shall provide a common standard of income eligibility for both institutional and |
4-68 |
home and community-based care. The department is, subject to prior approval of the general |
5-1 |
assembly, authorized to adopt criteria for admission to a nursing facility, hospital, or |
5-2 |
intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded that are more stringent than those employed |
5-3 |
for access to home and community-based services. The department is also authorized to |
5-4 |
promulgate rules that define the frequency of re-assessments for services provided for under this |
5-5 |
section. Legislatively approved levels of care may be applied in accordance with the following: |
5-6 |
      (1) The department shall apply pre-waiver level of care criteria for any Medicaid |
5-7 |
recipient eligible for a nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally |
5-8 |
retarded as of June 30, 2009, unless the recipient transitions to home and community based |
5-9 |
services because he or she: (a) Improves to a level where he/she would no longer meet the pre- |
5-10 |
waiver level of care criteria; or (b) The individual chooses home and community based services |
5-11 |
over the nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded. For the |
5-12 |
purposes of this section, a failed community placement, as defined in regulations promulgated by |
5-13 |
the department, shall be considered a condition of clinical eligibility for the highest level of care. |
5-14 |
The department shall confer with the long-term care ombudsperson with respect to the |
5-15 |
determination of a failed placement under the ombudsperson's jurisdiction. Should any Medicaid |
5-16 |
recipient eligible for a nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally |
5-17 |
retarded as of June 30, 2009 receive a determination of a failed community placement, the |
5-18 |
recipient shall have access to the highest level of care; furthermore, a recipient who has |
5-19 |
experienced a failed community placement shall be transitioned back into his or her former |
5-20 |
nursing home, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded whenever possible. |
5-21 |
Additionally, residents shall only be moved from a nursing home, hospital, or intermediate care |
5-22 |
facility for the mentally retarded in a manner consistent with applicable state and federal laws. |
5-23 |
      (2) Any Medicaid recipient eligible for the highest level of care who voluntarily leaves a |
5-24 |
nursing home, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded shall not be subject |
5-25 |
to any wait list for home and community based services. |
5-26 |
      (3) No nursing home, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded |
5-27 |
shall be denied payment for services rendered to a Medicaid recipient on the grounds that the |
5-28 |
recipient does not meet level of care criteria unless and until the department of human services |
5-29 |
has: (i) performed an individual assessment of the recipient at issue and provided written notice to |
5-30 |
the nursing home, hospital, or intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded that the |
5-31 |
recipient does not meet level of care criteria; and (ii) the recipient has either appealed that level of |
5-32 |
care determination and been unsuccessful, or any appeal period available to the recipient |
5-33 |
regarding that level of care determination has expired. |
6-34 |
      (d) The department of human services is further authorized and directed to consolidate |
6-35 |
all home and community-based services currently provided pursuant to section 1915(c) of title |
6-36 |
XIX of the United States Code into a single system of home and community-based services that |
6-37 |
include options for consumer direction and shared living. The resulting single home and |
6-38 |
community-based services system shall replace and supersede all section 1915(c) programs when |
6-39 |
fully implemented. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the resulting single program home and |
6-40 |
community-based services system shall include the continued funding of assisted living services |
6-41 |
at any assisted living facility financed by the Rhode Island housing and mortgage finance |
6-42 |
corporation prior to January 1, 2006, and shall be in accordance with chapter 66.8 of title 42 of |
6-43 |
the general laws as long as assisted living services are a covered Medicaid benefit. |
6-44 |
      (e) The department of human services is authorized to promulgate rules that permit |
6-45 |
certain optional services including, but not limited to, homemaker services, home modifications, |
6-46 |
respite, and physical therapy evaluations to be offered subject to availability of state-appropriated |
6-47 |
funding for these purposes. |
6-48 |
      (f) To promote the expansion of home and community-based service capacity, the |
6-49 |
department of human services is authorized and directed to pursue rate reform for homemaker, |
6-50 |
personal care (home health aide) and adult day care services, as follows: |
6-51 |
      (1) A prospective base adjustment effective, not later than July 1, 2008, across all |
6-52 |
departments and programs, of ten percent (10%) of the existing standard or average rate, |
6-53 |
contingent upon a demonstrated increase in the state-funded or Medicaid caseload by June 30, |
6-54 |
2009; |
6-55 |
      (2) Development, not later than September 30, 2008, of certification standards |
6-56 |
supporting and defining targeted rate increments to encourage service specialization and |
6-57 |
scheduling accommodations including, but not limited to, medication and pain management, |
6-58 |
wound management, certified Alzheimer's Syndrome treatment and support programs, and shift |
6-59 |
differentials for night and week-end services; and |
6-60 |
      (3) Development and submission to the governor and the general assembly, not later than |
6-61 |
December 31, 2008, of a proposed rate-setting methodology for home and community-based |
6-62 |
services to assure coverage of the base cost of service delivery as well as reasonable coverage of |
6-63 |
changes in cost caused by wage inflation. |
6-64 |
      (g) The department, in collaboration with the executive office of human services, shall |
6-65 |
implement a long-term care options counseling program to provide individuals or their |
6-66 |
representatives, or both, with long-term care consultations that shall include, at a minimum, |
6-67 |
information about: long-term care options, sources and methods of both public and private |
6-68 |
payment for long-term care services and an assessment of an individual's functional capabilities |
7-1 |
and opportunities for maximizing independence. Each individual admitted to or seeking |
7-2 |
admission to a long-term care facility regardless of the payment source shall be informed by the |
7-3 |
facility of the availability of the long-term care options counseling program and shall be provided |
7-4 |
with long-term care options consultation if they so request. Each individual who applies for |
7-5 |
Medicaid long-term care services shall be provided with a long-term care consultation. |
7-6 |
      (h) The department of human services is also authorized, subject to availability of |
7-7 |
appropriation of funding, to pay for certain expenses necessary to transition residents back to the |
7-8 |
community; provided, however, payments shall not exceed an annual or per person amount. |
7-9 |
      (i) To assure the continued financial viability of nursing facilities, the department of |
7-10 |
human services is authorized and directed to develop a proposal for revisions to section 40-8-19 |
7-11 |
that reflect the changes in cost and resident acuity that result from implementation of this re- |
7-12 |
balancing goal. Said proposal shall be submitted to the governor and the general assembly on or |
7-13 |
before January 1, 2010. |
7-14 |
      (j) To ensure persons with long-term care needs who remain living at home have |
7-15 |
adequate resources to deal with housing maintenance and unanticipated housing related costs, the |
7-16 |
department of human services is authorized to develop higher resource eligibility limits for |
7-17 |
persons on home and community waiver services who are living in their own homes or rental |
7-18 |
units. |
7-19 |
     (k) To promote increased access to assisted living services for Medicaid beneficiaries and |
7-20 |
to accelerate the rebalancing of the long-term care system, the executive office of health and |
7-21 |
human services ("executive office") shall pursue reimbursement rate reform for assisted living. In |
7-22 |
pursuing assisted living reimbursement rate reform, the executive office shall: |
7-23 |
     (1) Solicit input and consult regularly with representatives from relevant stakeholder |
7-24 |
groups, including, but not limited to, the Rhode assisted living association and leading age RI; |
7-25 |
     (2) Include in the assisted living reimbursement rate reform plan, at a minimum, the |
7-26 |
following elements: |
7-27 |
     (i) A tiered, acuity based reimbursement system for Medicaid assisted living services to |
7-28 |
replace the existing per diem flat rate. In pursuing a tiered reimbursement system, the office shall |
7-29 |
ensure that the lowest payment tier is no lower than the flat rate in existence on January 1, 2013; |
7-30 |
     (ii) Annual adjustments to the Medicaid assisted living services reimbursement rates by a |
7-31 |
percentage amount equal to the percentage rise in the United States consumer price index (CPI) |
7-32 |
for January 1 of that year. |
7-33 |
     (3) Explore options for an enhanced Medicaid services reimbursement rate for assisted |
7-34 |
living residences that are required by regulation to offer single-occupant apartments. |
8-1 |
     (4) Provide the speaker of the house of representatives, president of the senate, |
8-2 |
chairperson of the house committee on health education and welfare and chairperson of the senate |
8-3 |
committee on health and human services with an assisted living rate reform progress report no |
8-4 |
later than October 1, 2013; |
8-5 |
     (5) The executive office is hereby authorized and directed to file a state plan amendment |
8-6 |
with the U.S. department of health and human services in order to implement assisted living |
8-7 |
reimbursement rate reform no later than January 1, 2014. |
8-8 |
     SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
      | |
======= | |
LC02486 | |
======= | |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES - PUBLIC ASSISTANCE | |
*** | |
9-1 |
     This act would increase the state's monthly share of supplementary assistance to the |
9-2 |
supplementary security income program from $332.00 to $538.00. This act would also provide |
9-3 |
guidelines to promote reimbursement rate reform for assisted living. |
9-4 |
     This act would take effect upon passage. |
      | |
======= | |
LC02486 | |
======= |